• Thank you for visiting HeavyEquipmentForums.com! Our objective is to provide industry professionals a place to gather to exchange questions, answers and ideas. We welcome you to register using the "Register" icon at the top of the page. We'd appreciate any help you can offer in spreading the word of our new site. The more members that join, the bigger resource for all to enjoy. Thank you!

What to charge for post hole drilling?

FullMetalBucket

Active Member
Joined
Jul 26, 2007
Messages
29
Location
Port Dover, Ontario, Canada
Looking at a post hole auger for the skidsteer. It only has a 9" bit but is nearly new and priced at $2000 for everything. I've had a couple of people mentioning fence work lately and wondered what the rule is for pricing this kind of work? Wondering if it would be worth having even if we sit on it for awhile in between jobs.....
Thanks!
 

FullMetalBucket

Active Member
Joined
Jul 26, 2007
Messages
29
Location
Port Dover, Ontario, Canada
No one digs post holes??? One thing for me and earthmover is that there is alot of agriculture both where I am and where he is located so I'm thinking that next spring we can get in good with some farmers and get jobs for a few hundred holes..... I've heard of people charging $5.00-10.00 per hole for larger jobs, but what if we sub to a busy fence contractor or something for smaller jobs?? Flat rate???
 

alco

Senior Member
Joined
Apr 7, 2006
Messages
1,289
Location
here
I don't know what is fair in your neck of the woods. But up here, they charge absolutely ridiculous amounts per hole...or anything else for that matter. A friend of mine just got a quote for 20 holes at $80 per hole since they were in the neighborhood. If they had to come back or make a special trip, it was going to be $180 per hole.

Brian
 

CM1995

Administrator
Joined
Jan 21, 2007
Messages
13,385
Location
Alabama
Occupation
Running what I brung and taking what I win
I don't know what is fair in your neck of the woods. But up here, they charge absolutely ridiculous amounts per hole...or anything else for that matter. A friend of mine just got a quote for 20 holes at $80 per hole since they were in the neighborhood. If they had to come back or make a special trip, it was going to be $180 per hole.

Brian

Whoa!:eek: $80 bucks a hole! Man that's highway robbery. So the guys are going to drill 20 holes and make $1600 bucks, and if they came back it would be $3600 - holy crap!:eek: :eek: Ok - the question is: what is the ground - total rock? If it was "normal" soil, I could drill those holes with the bobcat in a couple hours - and have them cleaned out by hand.

20 posts at 10Ft centers = 200LF of fence. In my neck of the woods 6' dog eared pine, with PT 4x4 posts and PT 2x4 rails cost around $15 per FT. The whole kit and kaboodle would be $3000.

I guess the real question is - why does it cost so much up there?
 

alco

Senior Member
Joined
Apr 7, 2006
Messages
1,289
Location
here
Ok - the question is: what is the ground - total rock? If it was "normal" soil, I could drill those holes with the bobcat in a couple hours - and have them cleaned out by hand.

I guess the real question is - why does it cost so much up there?

The ground is mostly clay, nothing bad to dig in.

The reason it costs so much up here is that people have to have the work done and the contractors figure they can charge whatever they want. The people who work on the oilsands sites make very good money. Unfortunately, that's not the case for people in the service industry. I honestly don't know how they make a go of it. You can buy a 6 year old trailer for $420,000 now....and it's going up.

They charge astronomical amounts for everything, it doesn't matter what it is.

Brian
 

Dodge07around

Active Member
Joined
Nov 30, 2009
Messages
27
Location
Wyoming
Occupation
Contractor/owner/operator
alright, here we go. I'm a fence/exc. contractor here in the west, we have way hard dirt in areas. Thats way high price. $20 a hole for small jobs and $10 a hole for bigger ones. its a hole! you got the right equipment its piece o cake. $80 a hole i'm in the wrong place. If the fence is being installed by you then you go even cheaper cause you can win the bid and make it up on the parts obviosuly.
 

Homerun

Member
Joined
Feb 25, 2010
Messages
18
Location
Bagdad KY
If it is for a ploe barn and for some one out in the country I charge about $350 for a barn sized 20x30 or so if it is a big job I charge about $25 a hole.
 

Bumpsteer

Senior Member
Joined
Sep 2, 2009
Messages
1,345
Location
Front seat on the Struggle Bus
Occupation
Mechanical designer
I've always went flatrate when doing holes. Before I had my own auger the only way I would do it was to have the customer rent the auger. If you think I didn't want the job, your correct. Just a pita to have to go out of my way to get and return the attachment. Ended up only doing one job that way, I drilled enough holes to fence in 5 acres of horse pasture and post holes for a run-in shed...what a boring day.

Ed
 

ddigger

Senior Member
Joined
Jan 19, 2009
Messages
567
Location
Northern California
Occupation
contractor,owner operater
I bought my auger (bobcat) attachment with 2 penco auger bits 6 and a 12in and an extention to dig up to 8ft off of Craigs list for 800 dollers. I use it on my L39 kabota backhoe which is equiped with a bobcat style quick attach on the loader. I also made it so I can run it off the backhoe stick. I only use it around my own place, but around here the rate is 10 to 20 bucks a hole depending on soil and site conditions. A real handy tool to add to your fleet. I di think if you shop around you can find a better deal.
 

Hendrik

Senior Member
Joined
Mar 5, 2009
Messages
1,232
Location
Adelaide South Australia
I work on flat rate, which I think is fair, if the drilling is easy the customer pays less and if there are problems then the customer has to cough up more.
If you charge per hole you would want to know exactly what you are drilling into, a couple of rocks, roots or utility lines can slow you down real quick.
 

Ralleyii

New Member
Joined
Aug 11, 2023
Messages
1
Location
Central Texas
I have a New Holland C332 and a Belltec H350 head, an 1850lb Heavy Hitch, and 3 different bits with carbide tips.
This is my post retirement job so I may not charge enough. I charge $100 per machine hour with a minimum charge of $400. That way depth and rockiness, and hard ground customers don’t pay less than they should and soft ground customers don’t pay too much.
I live near a fault line so jobs to the west are rocky and those to the east are clay.
 

CM1995

Administrator
Joined
Jan 21, 2007
Messages
13,385
Location
Alabama
Occupation
Running what I brung and taking what I win
Welcome to the Forums RL! Glad to have you.

Wow this is an old thread - forgot about this one. Times sure have changed or at the least the value of a dollar has. :oops:

Interesting enough we've had several GC's ask if we could drill their light poles bases, menu boards, canopy footings, etc on commercial projects. For example there are at 8-12 holes to drill on a typical Zaxbys or Starbucks. All would be 24" diameter in varying depths.

It would have to be at least $100 per hole for us to make it worth our while and that price would only be when we were already there fine grading the parking lot, no mobilization included.
 
Top